A new Reich 1933-35 Flashcards

1
Q

Why did Brunings government of 1930-2 fail?

A
  • Relied on presidential decrees, not Reichstag
  • Hindenburg won the presidential election, but Hitler gained 37% of the vote
  • Proposal to break up bankrupt Prussian estates has Hindenburg dismiss him
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2
Q

How did Papen’s 1932 government fail?

A
  • July 1932, Extremists won over half of the Reichstag seats, but Hindenburg denies Hitler chancellorship
  • Loses a no-confidence vote, Election called by Schleicher’s advice.
  • Schacht and other industrial leaders call for a Hitler government. Hindenburg only agrees if Hitler gets a majority
  • Papen calls for an authoritarian constitution, and is deposed by Von Schleicher.
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3
Q

How did Von Schleicher’s government of 1932-3 fail?

A
  • Alienated elite who warned Hindenburg of ‘Agrarian bolshevism’, and failed to win support of the Left
  • January 1933, Papen agrees to work with Hitler as vice-Chancellor
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4
Q

What was Hitler’s initial cabinet?

A

Hitler as Chancellor, Frick as Minister for the Interior, and Göring as Minister without Portfolio (but with control over the Prussian police). These were the only Nazis

Papen was the vice-chancellor

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5
Q

Hitler became Chancellor on the 30th January, 1933. What did he do first?

A

Within 24 hours of being appointed, he called new elections for 5th March, 1933

Violence and terror dominated with the meetings of the far left being broken up by the Nazis. In Prussia, Göring used his authority to enrol an extra 50,000 into the police, nearly all from the SA or SS

As result, 69 people died during the 5 week campaign. Hitler would blame all these problems in Germany on the communists and the Nazi party was part of a ‘national uprising’

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6
Q

How well off was the Nazi Party as the new March election drew near in 1933?

A

At a meeting on the 20th Feb, 1933, 20 industrialists pledged 3 million Reichsmarks. With such a backing and Goebbels exploitation of the media, the Nazis were confident in securing a parliamentary majority

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7
Q

When was the Reichstag Fire, and what resulted from it?

A

27th Feb, 1933, the Reichstag building in Berlin was set on fire and a young, Dutch Communist, Marinus van der Lubbe was arrested. Some believe the fire was caused by the Nazis in a coup

28th Feb, 1933, Frick drew up the ‘Decree for the Protection of the People and State’, which, in a few short clauses, saw most civil and political liberties suspended.

The justification for this law was the threat posed by the Communists, and following this, hundreds of anti-Nazis were arrested, and the violence reached new heights

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8
Q

How much did the Nazi vote increase by in the March 1933 election?

A

Went from 33.1% to a high 43.9%.

Hitler would now claim a majority by allying with the nationalists

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9
Q

How did Hitler attempt to gain further support following the Reichstag election in March, 1933?

A

Hitler knew he could not change the constitution without a 2/3 majority, and began a campaign of reassurance

The opening of the Reichstag in Potsdam on 21st March, 1933, was a propaganda triumph, with Hitler bowing in front of President Hindenburg

He successfully aligned the forces of Nazism with the forces of old Germany. The same day, Hitler would pass the Malicious Practices Law, which banned criticism of the regime and its policies

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10
Q

How did Hitler successfully pass the Enabling Act on the 23rd March, 1933, in the Kroll Opera House?

A

The Communists were refused entry to the house, and the SA intimidated attendees by surrounding the building.

In order to achieve the 2/3 majority, with the knowledge the SPD would vote against the bill, the Nazis promised to respect the rights of the Catholic church and to uphold moral and religious values for the Z party

These false promises deceived the Z party and in the end, only the SPD voted against the Enabling Act. It was passed 444 votes to 94

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11
Q

What did the Enabling Act of March, 1933, give Hitler and the Nazis the power to do?

A
  • Restrictions on liberty, speech, free expression, assembly, etc
  • Reich Government may temporarily take over the powers of the supreme authority of a state in which security is not guaranteed
  • Reich cabinet authorised to enact laws which may deviate from the constitution
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12
Q

What was the Gleichschaltung?

A

The gradual assimilation of all aspects of the state into the Nazi Party

This was a “co-ordination” or “switching on” of the German people

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13
Q

Which parts of society were controlled via the Gleichschaltung?

A

In the Judiciary, political opponents and jews were removed

Control of the media by Joseph Goebbels, head of propaganda. Press, radio, and films disseminated the message

For professional reasons, associating with the Nazis was of great benefit

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14
Q

When and what was the Kopenick Blood Week?

A

Withing 4 months of the Enabling Act, all political opposition was abolished. The SPD suffered the most

This culminated in the Kopenick Blood Week between 21-26 June, 1933, where 500 SPD members and known political opponents were tortured by the SA, SS, and Gestapo.

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15
Q

What was the result of the Kopenick Blood Week?

A

23 died.

The SPD was dissolved on the 22 June, 1933, with the DNVP absorbed into the Nazis

The Z party was weakened by the Catholic Concordat, disbanded on the 5th July

14 July, Nazis were the only legal party

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16
Q

How were the unions in Germany dealt with by the Nazis, and how did they react?

A

Christian trade union dissolved by the concordat, socialist ones through violence

The Socialist unions had over 4 million members, but they promised to disassociate with the SPD and cooperate with the Nazis

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17
Q

How did the Nazis destroy the trade unions in Germany?

A

Nazis seemed agreeable, with the 1st May 1933 designated Day of National Labour and a holiday for workers. The following day, the SA raided union offices and arrested leaders

All unions were unified into the new DAF, the only legal trade union

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18
Q

Why did Papen depose the Socialist/Z coalition government in 1932?

A

Supposedly to control street violence that the coalition couldn’t.

It was actually to destroy the SPD base in Prussia and gain right wing support

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19
Q

How did the Nazis take over the regional governments?

A

Article 2 of the Reichstag Fire Decrees enabled the Nazis to take control of any state which couldn’t enforce law and order.

By the end of March, all regional governments were under Nazi control.

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20
Q

Which Nazi officials controlled regions of Germany?

A

Gauleiters became regional dictators, having control over the Länder

Law for Reconstruction of the Reich ended the State parliaments

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21
Q

What was the SS?

A

Formed in 1925 as an elite bodyguard of Hitler, but remained a relatively minor section of the SA with only 250 members until Himmler became its leader in 1929

By 1933, the SS numbered 52,000 and had established a reputation for blind obedience

Himmler also created a special security service in 1931 called the SD to act as the party’s own internal police

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22
Q

How did Himmler and the SS take down the police and SA and integrate power into themselves?

A

1933-4, Himmler assumed control of all the police in the Länder. Hitler turned to Himmler’s SS to carry out the purge on the Night of the Long Knives in June, 1934.

In 1936, all police powers were unified under Himmler’s control as ‘Reichsführer SS and Chief of all German Police’

In 1939, all police organisations were amalgamated into the RSHA, overseen by Himmler but actually coordinated by his deputy, Heydrich

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23
Q

How large was the SS by 1939?

A

Numbering 250,000 in 1939, it eclipsed all other Nazi interest groups in terms of power and influence. This power spread with war, as it took all policing and intelligence responsibilities in the new territories

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24
Q

How did the SS become a military force?

A

The Waffen SS increased from 3 divisions in 1939 to 35 in 1945 which developed into a ‘second army’. Committed, brutal and, militarily, highly rated. By 1944, the SS was so powerful, it rivalled the power of the German army

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25
Q

What was the ‘New Order’ that the SS were responsible for in territories taken over in WW2?

A

The ‘New Order’ in Eastern Europe provided opportunities for plunder and power, which members of the SS exploited.

By the end of the war, the SS was a massive commercial enterprise of over 150 firms which exploited slave labour to extract raw materials and to manufacture textiles, armaments, and household goods

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26
Q

How did the SS enact its ideology during WW2?

A

The racial policy of extermination and resettlement was pursued with vigour and the system of concentration camps was widely established and run by the SS’ Death’s-Head Units

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27
Q

How did the Gestapo control the people of Germany?

A

The Gestapo imposed terror on their enemies, while at the same time creating a grim ‘pact’ with the German people such that civilians would comply willingly

It was for this reason that people felt the Gestapo were everywhere. Despite this, there were only 28 Gestapo officials covering the million people in Würzburg and surrounding Lower Franconia

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28
Q

How many Gestapo officials were there?

A

Manpower was limited, with only 40,000 agents for all of Germany. Large cities, like Frankfurt or Hamburg, with over 500,000 people, were policed by just 40-50 agents

In 1942, there were only 30,000 officials.

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29
Q

How cooperative were the German people with the Gestapo?

A

Intending to intimidate the opposition, its meagre resources were aided by a willing populace

Local studies reveal that over 50%, and sometimes 80%, of investigation stemmed from voluntary denunciations. And these were just the cases where the Gestapo actually investigated!

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30
Q

How did living standard for workers improve under the Nazi regime?

A

Only 35,000 of 25 million male workers were classed as ‘unemployed’. Wage freezes in 1933 bypassed by Christmas bonuses and providing insurance schemes

By 1936 average wage for a worker was 35 marks/week, 10x more than dole money 6 million had received

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31
Q

Did workers in Nazi Germany get holidays?

A

Average paid holidays rose from 3 days per year in 1933 to between 6 and 12 days per year in 1939

Lazy bums

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32
Q

What were some limits to the improvements in living standards under Nazi rule?

A

Wages only really rose by 1% a year under Nazi rule

Taxation and deductions rose from 15% to 18% (Weimar to Nazis)

1938, govt took power to direct workers where to work, rather than choose where

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33
Q

What did workers lose under Nazi rule?

A

Loss of political freedoms, and in Feb. 1935, workers needed a ‘workbook’ to find employment

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34
Q

What was the DAF?

A

Set up on the 6th May, 1933, the DAF was the nationally recognised trade union. Membership included employers as well as employees.

Membership grew from 5 million in 1933 to 22 million in 1939, and was intended to sway workers towards Nazism

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35
Q

Who led the DAF?

A

Robert Ley, the leader of the largest organisation in the Third Reich

He was an incompetent man, seen as the “Reich Drunkard”, and was notoriously unstable and very corrupt

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36
Q

In 1938 the DAF organised the Volkswagen scheme. What was it?

A

The scheme gave workers the opportunity to subscribe 5 marks a week to a fund eventually allowing them to acquire a car. The scheme’s chief impact was to reduce the danger of inflation by boosting savings

No worker actually received a car, and in 1939 production was switched to military needs

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37
Q

What was the RAD?

A

The Reichsarbeitsdienst started as a voluntary scheme under the Weimar Republic. In June 1935, a law made six months labour compulsory for all men aged between 19 and 35.

This was extended to women in 1939, and the scheme was intended for the working class. Most members were employed in agriculture or public works

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38
Q

Why did Hitler decide to purge the SA in the Night of the Long Knives on the 30th June, 1934?

A

The SA had become too radical and violent, disliked by the middle class and military, whom Hitler needed support from. As such, the radical, revolutionary SA had to be dealt with

tfw when you’re too radical for Hitler

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39
Q

What was the impact of the Night of the Long Knives?

A

Very positive for the dictatorship; destroyed conservative opposition and appealed to the military and industrialists. Military even swore an oath to Hitler on the 20th August, 1934

SA violence was unpopular, so the German people were also fans of his actions, with many seeing Hitler as decisive. Opposition saw this as how Hitler treated opponents

40
Q

How did Goebbels utilise the radio after all of its was brought under control of the Reich Radio Company?

A

13% of radio staff were sacked on racial grounds and replaced with sympathetic Germans. In 1932, less than 25% of Germans had a radio, by 1939 70% did

The Nazis made cheap radio sets, the People’s Receiver.

Broadcasting was directed at public places -restaurants, cafes, factories, and offices had loudspeakers so all could hear the Nazi’s message

41
Q

How did the Nazis take control of the press?

A

When the Nazis took control of Germany, there were 4,700 daily newspapers. The Nazi publishing house, Eher-Verlag, bought up many newspapers and controlled 2/3 of the German press by 1939

News agencies were merged into one state controlled DNB which vetted news before it was given to journalists

42
Q

What did Goebbels introduce to the press?

A

Goebbels introduced a daily press conference at the Propaganda Ministry to provide editorial guidance.

The Editors Law of October, 1933, made newspaper content the responsibility of the editor who had to meet strict guidelines

The Nazi newspaper, the Völkischer Beobachter, had 1.7 million readers by 1944

43
Q

How did the Nazis engage in cinema?

A

Banning Jewish film makers, Goebbels recognised the power of propaganda films and 1,097 films were made from 1933-45

For example, The Eternal Jew, The Adventures of Baron von Münchhauen

44
Q

Who was Leni Riefenstahl?

A

A female film maker who helped create several Nazi propaganda pictures. She filmed the 1936 Olympics and shot over 1 million feet of film. This was released in her film, Olympia, in April 1938.

She also made a film called Triumph of the Will, also very nationalistic.

45
Q

What was Hitler’s character like?

A

Appeared as a charismatic and magnetic figure, portrayed as an “ordinary man” with the will to transform Germany. He liked to cultivate the image of an artist, but in reality was quite lazy, absent from Berlin

He was immersed in pet projects, and became more neurotic, moody, and obsessive with his health

He wasn’t well educated, no experience in governance. Loathed paperwork and formalities, believing will power was enough

46
Q

What was Hitler’s leadership like, particularly in regard to cabinet meetings, and what culture did this create?

A

Not very decisive, never showing inclination to co-ordinate government. In 1933, cabinet met 72 times, but only 4 times in 1936. Last official cabinet meeting was in February 1938.

Rivalry between factions, following will of the Führer. Despite this, he had no real effective opposition

His underlings took part in an environment to “work towards the Führer”.

47
Q

What was the Reich Chancellery like?

A

Responsible for coordinating the government, as the role of cabinet declined, chancellor became more important

Head was Hans-Heinrich Lammers. He drew up all govt. legislation, and controlled information from organisations to Hitler

However, even the very organised Lammers found it impossible to coordinate the growing number of organisations

48
Q

What were the Government Ministries like?

A

Transport, education, and economics were run by leading civil servants. The Foreign Office was very conservative.

Under pressure by Nazis, with Economics ministry affected by 4 year plans, and foreign offices losing control to the Ribbentrop Bureau

Aristocratic foreign minister Neurath is sacked and replaced in 1938 by the Nazi Joachim von Ribbentrop

49
Q

What was the Judiciary under the Nazis like?

A

Judges and lawyers were co-ordinated although the justice minister, Franz Gürtner, was not a Nazi and in power until 1941

Nazis established ‘special courts’ in 1933 to convict political opponents without Jury (1933)

In 1934, Peoples court established to try cases of high treason, with Nazi jury. From 1934-45, this results in 7,000/16,000 results as death sentences

Nacht und Nebel of 1941 gave SS power above the law

50
Q

What were the Regional Governments like?

A

By early 1934, the Gleichschaltung had destroyed the federal principle of government, with Nazi Governors there to “execute the will of the supreme leadership of the Reich”

These were mostly local party Gauleiters with full powers, but their role in the party structure was not clear

51
Q

What was Hitler’s approach to government, and what did this lack of coordination enable him to do?

A

By August 1933, it was clear Hitler had no interest in discussions or designing new legislation. Hitler didn’t coordinate the ministerial departments, so different ministers could be working on legislation which contradicted or replicated other departments work.

This system enabled Hitler to focus upon rearmament and reversing Versailles.

52
Q

What did Hitler work like in government, and how did he expect other departments to work?

A

Hitler had no experience in political legislation. He was disorganised, slept in late, and hated Berlin

He began to apply the idea of evolution on his governing style in that competition between departments may lead to the best results.

He would ignore many important ministers, choosing to spend time with his favourites

53
Q

What did the Nazis perpetuate about Hitlers leadership?

A

The Nazis perpetuated a myth that Hitler could never be wrong and laws could never fail so even ridiculous ideas that were made into law were never ended

This meant that enforcing this chaotic system was difficult for the police and impossible for the Germans to understand. The fear and uncertainty created through this ensured that few opposed the Nazi state

54
Q

How did the Nazis hope to realise Hitler’s vision?

A

Even without direction, Nazi officials used Mein Kampf and Hitler’s speeches to understand the ideology and form legislation.

Hitler had to sign off an each law and only chose those that he favoured therefore ensuring his ideas became a reality. Only a few ministers (Himmler, Göring, Göbbels) could gain personal meetings with Hitler. Everyone else went through Lammers

Lammers power lay in the choice of legislation he presented to Hitler, thus it was important to win favour with him

55
Q

What was the Cumulative Radicalisation in the Nazi regime?

A

Hitler tended to prefer far more radical laws. Competition between departments meant that legislation became increasingly radical in order to gain Hitler’s favour

This is well seen with anti-Semitic laws. Hitler never set out a clear policy for Jews in Nazi Germany but this radicalisation ensured the policies became more extreme in short time

Hitler’s method of leadership therefore ensured his most terrifying ideas became a reality during the 1930s

56
Q

What were Hitler’s preferences in governance, and what did he avoid?

A

Hitler had a preference for creating new organs of state to carry out specific projects. His personal popularity was a source of power, however it was not much help in the practical business of selecting goals

Hitler’s sense of dependence on his own popularity was so great that the cult of the Führer may well have contributed to government inaction in domestic affairs

Hitler was certainly careful not to associate himself with any measure that he thought might be unpopular

57
Q

How did Hitler actions hope to please the military?

A

February 1933, Hitler proclaimed only members of the army could carry weapons, not the SA. January 1934, he ordered the SA limit their political agitation activities

Hitler focused on rearmament, and generals particularly liked when conscription was introduced in 1935

58
Q

What ensured that the leader of the SA, Ernst Röhm, would be killed in the Night of the Long Knives?

A

He called for a people’s militia, which ran counter to Hitler’s ideas. Such an idea also contrasted the military, who Hitler wanted on-side

59
Q

How did Hitler keep the army under heel?

A

Soldiers were to be educated in Nazi ideology, diluting traditional Prussian values that had shaped the army since 1871.

The army was concerned that they had no say over developments in the military (such as introducing conscription) but this was Hitler’s way of limiting their influence

Moreover, Himmler’s SS grew increasingly powerful as they grew, as the heads of the Nazis racial extermination policies.

60
Q

When did President Hindenburg, one of Hitler’s opponents, die?

A

On the 2nd August, 1934, President Hindenburg dies. God rest his soul. There was no political crisis.

Hitler merged the offices of the Chancellor and President and took the new, official title of Führer. The Nazi regime had been stabilised and the threat of a ‘second revolution’ by the SA had been removed

61
Q

What was the Decree of the Reich President for the Protection of the Nation and State?

A

Suspended constitutional and civil rights

Gave secret police power to hold people indefinitely in protective custody

62
Q

When and what was the Concordat?

A

20th July, 1933, the Concordat agreement between the State and the Vatican

Church was to be banned from political activity, but state protected religious freedoms

63
Q

Why was the Ministry of the Reichswehr in opposition to Göring?

A

The military was angered that the new Luftwaffe was placed under the control of the Reich Aviation Ministry under Göring, rather than the Ministry of the Reichswehr

63
Q

Why did Hjalmar Schacht resign?

A

Once the problems of the Great Depression had been overcome through Schacht’s shrewd actions, Hitler appointed Göring Plenipotentiary of the Four Year Plan in 1936 resulting in Schacht’s resignation

His economic policies were being overruled by Göring’s clumsy handling of the economy

64
Q

How did Hjalmar Schacht run contrary to most in Nazi Germany, and who opposed this?

A

Robert Ley tried to utilise the DAF to influence economics affairs but from 1934-7 the minister for economics, Hjalmar Schacht, was in charge

He wasn’t a member of the Nazi party

65
Q

Why did Frick and Himmler clash?

A

Lines between party and state were blurred when the SS, SA, and Stahlhelm were induced into the Prussian police force. From 1933-6, the minister for the interior, Frick, and Himmler argued over who controlled the police

Eventually, Himmler was placed in charge of the police in 1936. This made the police an instrument of the Nazis rather than an independent organisation upholding the rule of law

66
Q

Which group of people did Frick oppose?

A

The Gauleiters, who were in charge of the regions of Germany, were largely independent and clashed with the minister of the interior, Frick, who couldn’t control them

67
Q

What was the Volksgemeinschaft supposed to be?

A

The purpose of the Volksgemeinschaft was intended to overcome the old German division of class, religion, and politics and bring about a collective national identity by encouraging people to work together but on the Nazi ideas of race and struggle

68
Q

What was the ideal German image in Nazi Germany?

A

The ideal German image was that of a classic peasant working on the soil in the rural community: exemplified by the Nazi concept of ‘Blood and Soil’ (Blut und Boden) and by upholding the traditional roles of the two sexes

69
Q

What was the NSV?

A

The National Socialist Peoples Welfare

In 1934, it distributed 25,800L of milk, 1,500 grocery parcels, and 172 sets of baby clothes

The charity was intended to help mothers

70
Q

Who were the Lebensborn?

A

State mandated prostitutes from 1933-45

11,000 children were born from these women.

71
Q

What were mothers awarded in Nazi Germany?

A

Financial incentives for birth and marriage, such as in 1933 a 600RM marriage loan if unemployed. There was also the 1937 loan extended to women in work.

Propaganda to raise status of mothers, with awards like the Mother’s Cross. 1938 Marriage Law extended the grounds for divorce, but tighter penalties on abortion

72
Q

How did female employment reduce?

A

In 1933, Women in top civil service and medical jobs were dismissed. In 1936, women were banned from being judges, lawyers

In 1939, unmarried women under 25 had to take part in Compulsory Agricultural Labour service. In 1943, Speer’s proposal to conscript women was opposed due to the potential impact on morale.

73
Q

When was schooling centralised in Nazi Germany and what came about of it?

A

Schooling was centralised in 1934 under the Reich Minister Bernhard Rust. Politically unreliable individuals were removed and Jewish teachers banned.

Special training courses were arranged for those teacher who remained unconvinced. The NSLB (Nazi teachers league) included 97% of all teachers by 1937, and 2/3 had been on the one-month long course

74
Q

What did Nazi schooling hope to teach in young people?

A

Emphasis was placed on PE, with 15% of school time being given to it, and games teachers had higher status. RE was scrapped, whereas German, Biology (eugenics), and History became the focus

Lang and Lit emphasised German nationalism, Biology delivered racial theories such as ethnic classifications and population control. History was given special status to illustrate the glories of German nationalism

75
Q

How many members of the Hitler youth between 1932 and 1938?

A

In 1932, there were 200,000 members of the Hitler Youth, or 1.5% of kids

In 1938, there were 7,100,000 members, or 77.2% of kids

76
Q

What was the Hitler Youth?

A

Collective name for a number of youth groups under the control of Baldur von Schirach and from 1933, membership grew greatly due to pressure on parents

By 1939, membership was compulsory

77
Q

Who were the Edelweiss Pirates?

A

A youth group which opposed Nazi ideas. They exhibited banned behaviour, such as jazz and dance bands. They organised their own events at odds with the Hitler Youth

There was a youth concentration camp at Neuwied and in 1944, 12 Edelweiss Pirates were hanged because of their attacks on military targets and the assassination of a Gestapo officer

78
Q

How did big business benefit under the Nazis?

A

The value of German industry steadily increased from the share price index and improvement of management salaries.

From 1938, annexations/conquests of war provided enormous opportunities for taking over foreign property, land, and companies

79
Q

How was big business limited under the Nazis?

A

Increasing range of government controls over operations.

For example, the Law to Protect Retail Trade, 1933, banned the opening of new department stores, which benefited the Mittelstand

80
Q

What were the first cases of the Nazis going against Jews while in power?

A

Racial policy lacked direction. Hitler was concerned with random acts of violence against Jews since this was unpopular with the general public. In March 1933, the SA began rampaging against Jewish business and peoples

In attempt to rein in the violence, Hitler ordered a boycott of Jewish shops which the SA agreed on the 1st April, 1933. SA men stood outside Jewish shops but the boycott was unsuccessful

81
Q

What was the Law for the Restoration of the Civil Service?

A

Removed 5% of the so-called alien elements in the civil service

President Hindenburg stopped the law from targeting any Jews who had fought in WW1 or had family that died in the war

82
Q

Who called for and opposed the 1935 Nuremburg Laws?

A

In 1935 thee was pressure from within the party to remove Jews from citizenship with a wave of attacks on Jews.

Others, like Schacht, the Wizard (this joke is very specific), saw this as distasteful and worried about the effect of such an action on exports

83
Q

How were the 1935 Nuremberg Laws introduced?

A

Prompted by a speech by the Reich Doctors’ leader, Gerhard Wagner, which hinted that a new racial policy was imminent, Hitler switched his Nuremburg speech from foreign policy to anti-Jewish legislation leading to the so-called Nuremburg laws.

Four draft laws were written overnight by civil servants, presented to Hitler and passed by the Reichstag, meeting at Nuremburg on 15th September

84
Q

What was included in the Nuremburg Laws?

A
  • Illegal for Germans and Jews to be married or have sex
  • Jews were no longer German citizens but were designated ‘subjects’, enforced by the Reich Citizenship Act
  • Jews were classed as anyone with three Jewish grandparents, or two Jewish grandparents if they were a practising Jew, if they they had a Jewish spouse
  • Jews were therefore legally second-class citizens living under legal repression
85
Q

How did the Germans enforce emigration after the Anschluss in 1938?

A

Central Office for Jewish Emigration established in Vienna, run by Eichmann. Property was confiscated to finance poor Jewish emigrants.

In 6 months, 45,000 emigrated. January 1939, Goring created the Reich Central Office for Jewish Emigration, run by Heydrich and Eichmann

Half of Jews left Germany before the war, such that from 1933-9 there were 257,000 emigrants

86
Q

What newspapers did Goebbels help have published to spread propaganda?

A

Der Angriff and Der Stürmer

87
Q

How did peasants benefit under the Nazis?

A

Many debts and mortgages were written off and small farms were given low interest rates + tax allowances

Increase in prices from 1933-6 helped finance the farms

Production also increased by 20% from 1928-1938

88
Q

How were Peasants limited under Nazi rule?

A

1933, the Reich Food Estate supervised agricultural distribution, setting quotas e.g. each hen lay 65 eggs per year

Agriculture wasn’t as competitive as other sectors

Shortage of labour as more and more were conscripted

89
Q

What were some benefits for Industrial Workers under Nazi rule?

A

Training schemes for apprenticeships, and the supervising of conditions through the SdA of the DAF which aimed to provide cleaning, meals, and exercise

There were 10.3 million KdF holidays in 1938, and full employment by the end of the 1930s

90
Q

How were industrial workers limited under Nazi rule?

A

Established trade unions closed down and loss the right of industrial bargaining. Management and government controlled pay increases and limit freedom of movement

Real wages only rose above 1929 levels in 1938.

The Average working week went from 43 to 47 hours from 1933-1939

91
Q

How did Landowners benefit under Nazi rule?

A

Economic interest was not threatened before 1939

German victories offered the chance of acquiring more cheap land

92
Q

How were landowners limited under Nazi rule?

A

Resented political interference of the party, and feared land redistribution.

1945, East Germany occupation by USSR saw the nationalisation of the land, leading to the traditional social and economic supremacy of the Junkers being broken

93
Q

How did the Mittelstand benefit under Nazi rule?

A

Money from the confiscation of Jewish businesses was used to offer low interest rate loans.

The Law to Protect Retail Trade 1933 banned the opening of new department stores

Trading regulations to protect small craftsmen

94
Q

How were the Mittelstand limited under Nazi rule?

A

They continued to decline, as the costs of doing small business could not compete with economies of scale of large department stores

1933, 20% of small business owners under 30, 14% over 60. By 1939, 10% under and 19% over.

In 1936-9. the number of traditional skilled craftsmen fell by 10%

95
Q

Who was killed in the Night of the Long Knives?

A
  • Ernst Röhm, leader of the SA, and gay, which is shocking for the Nazis
  • Gregor Strasser, leader of the Strasserist movement
  • Gustav Ritter von Kahr, who had helped suppress Hitler’s Munich Beer Hall Putsch
  • Former chancellor, General Kurt von Schleicher
96
Q

Why did General Kurt von Schleicher resign in 1933?

A

He faced a political impasse, and declining health. As such, he recommended the appointment of Hitler in his stead

Upon recovering, he sought a return to politics as to exploit the divisions between the Ernst Röhm and the Nazis in 1934